For
more than a millennium
Today, thousands of different haggadahs exist, with prayers, rituals and readings tailored to every type of Seder – from
LGBTQ+-affirming

Its history reflects how Jews modernized and
adapted to their new country
Coffee competition
One explanation is advertising: a field so pervasive and powerful in people’s lives that it becomes almost invisible. As
a scholar of American Jewish visual culture and communication
The story
Jacobs’ quest to familiarize companies with
the buying power of the growing population of Jewish Americans
Consulting a rabbi from the Lower East Side, who declared that technically coffee beans were like berries and therefore kosher for Passover, Jacobs
secured a rabbinical stamp of approval
During the Great Depression of the 1930s, when a major grocery chain
discounted their own brand of coffee
Beyond its appeal as a giveaway, however, the content of the haggadah needed to earn Jewish customers’ trust. The front cover relied upon a classical design of centered text in Hebrew, but also English. Inside, pen and ink illustrations of biblical stories continued the sense of tradition. The pages of the haggadah turned from right to left, as is typical of Hebrew texts.
It worked. According to
a market report
Modernizing the haggadah
The Maxwell House Haggadah remained largely the same through the 1940s and ‘50s, and soon achieved the status of a Passover classic. Yet
the 1965 version

For the next 30 years, very little changed in the haggadah. But in 2000, it finally received a visual makeover, as seen in an advertisement that year. Stark graphics, popular since the mid-‘60s, were replaced with nostalgic photos depicting an intergenerational family at a Seder. This tender imagery invoked tradition at a time when
many Americans had grown more distant from their Jewish communities
In 2009, the haggadah achieved worldwide fame when President Barack Obama used it to conduct
his first White House Seder

And in 2019, when “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” the television show about a mid-century Jewish housewife-turned-comedian, was at its height of popularity, Maxwell House published a special
Mrs. Maisel edition of its haggadah
[Over 150,000 readers rely on The Conversation’s newsletters to understand the world.
Sign up today

In a sea of
thousands of haggadahs
Kerri Steinberg
This article is republished from
The Conversation